The research work addresses the changes and continuities in perceptions of sexuality, particularly regarding virginity and menarche, highlighting differences between rural and urban contexts. The aim is to identify communicative practices transmitted from the preceding generation to the succeeding one that has transformed perceptions of menarche and virginity in three generations of female migrants from agricultural areas of the Cundinamarca region to Bogotá between 1980 and 1990. The justification for the study is grounded in the importance of understanding how social meanings are transmitted across generations and how these affect women's daily lives, especially in historically silenced topics such as sexuality. The article proposes the creation of two episodes (sound chronicles) in podcast format that will narrate the experiences of three women from three generational lines. The methodology involved interviews conducted with nine women (three per generation). Responses were categorized, and three characters (one per generation) were constructed to represent the experiences and thoughts of women during these two moments in their life cycle. It is found that while the approach to female sexuality is increasingly broad, a biological perspective on the topic persists, and there is still considerable reluctance to address socio-affective issues from the household that affect how women experience changes in their bodies.